Flutter package for prompting users to upgrade when there is a newer version of the app in the store.
When a newer app version is availabe in the app store, a simple alert prompt or card is displayed. With today's modern app stores, there is little need to persuade users to upgrade because most are already using the auto upgrade feature. However, there may be times when an app needs to be updated more quickly than usual, and nagging a user to upgrade will entice the upgrade sooner. Also, with Flutter supporting more than just Android and iOS platforms in the future, it will become more likely that users on other app stores need to be nagged about upgrading.
The UI comes in two flavors: alert or card. The UpgradeAlert class is used to display the popup alert prompt, and the UpgradeCard class is used to display the inline material design card.
The text displayed in the upgrader package is localized in many languages, and supports customization.
The release notes are displayed by default when a new version is available. On Android the release notes are taken from the the WHAT'S NEW section on Google Play. On iOS the release notes are taken from the App Store What's New section. For appcast), the release notes are taken from the description field.
Just wrap your body widget in the UpgradeAlert
widget, and it will handle the rest.
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:upgrader/upgrader.dart';
void main() => runApp(MyApp());
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
MyApp({
Key key,
}) : super(key: key);
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
title: 'Upgrader Example',
home: Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: Text('Upgrader Example'),
),
body: UpgradeAlert(
child: Center(child: Text('Checking...')),
)
),
);
}
}
You can also display a Cupertino style dialog by using the dialogStyle
parameter.
body: UpgradeAlert(
dialogStyle: UpgradeDialogStyle.cupertino,
child: Center(child: Text('Checking...')),
)
Just return an UpgradeCard
widget in your build method and a material design card will be displayed
when an update is detected. The widget will have width and height of 0.0 when no update is detected.
return Container(
margin: EdgeInsets.fromLTRB(12.0, 0.0, 12.0, 0.0),
child: UpgradeCard());
The UpgradeAlert widget can be customized by setting parameters in the constructor of the UpgradeAlert widget.
- appcastConfig: the appcast configuration, defaults to
null
- client: an HTTP Client that can be replaced for mock testing, defaults to
null
- durationUntilAlertAgain: duration until alerting user again, which defaults to
3 days
- debugDisplayAlways: always force the upgrade to be available, defaults to
false
- debugDisplayOnce: display the upgrade at least once once, defaults to
false
- debugLogging: display logging statements, which defaults to
false
- messages: optional localized messages used for display in upgrader
- onIgnore: called when the ignore button is tapped, defaults to
null
- onLater: called when the later button is tapped, defaults to
null
- onUpdate: called when the update button is tapped, defaults to
null
- shouldPopScope: called when the back button is tapped, defaults to
null
- showIgnore: hide or show Ignore button, which defaults to
true
- showLater: hide or show Later button, which defaults to
true
- showReleaseNotes: hide or show release notes, which defaults to
true
- canDismissDialog: can alert dialog be dismissed on tap outside of the alert dialog, which defaults to
false
(not used by UpgradeCard) - countryCode: the country code that will override the system locale, which defaults to
null
(iOS only) - minAppVersion: the minimum app version supported by this app. Earlier versions of this app will be forced to update to the current version. Defaults to
null
. - dialogStyle: the upgrade dialog style, either
material
orcupertino
, defaults tomaterial
, used only by UpgradeAlert, works on Android and iOS.
When using the UpgradeAlert
widget, the Android back button will not
dismiss the alert dialog by default. To allow the back button to dismiss the
dialog, use shouldPopScope
and return true like this:
UpgradeAlert(
shouldPopScope: () => true,
);
When your app is not in the iOS US
App Store, which is the default, you must use
the countryCode
parameter mentioned above. The upgrader package does not know
which country app store to use because it is not provided by Apple. It assumes
the app is in the US
App Store.
These widgets work on both Android and iOS. When running on Android the Google Play Store will provide the latest app version. When running on iOS the App Store will provide the latest app version. In all cases, the widget will display the prompt at the appropriate times.
On Android, the version number is often not available from the Google Play
Store, such as with the
Google Maps
app. In this case, the version is listed as Varies with device
. That is not a
valid version for upgrader and cannot be used. The upgrader widget will not be
displayed in this case.
There is an appcast that can be used to remotely configure the latest app version. See appcast below for more details.
The class Appcast, in this Flutter package, is used by the Upgrader widgets to download app details from an appcast, based on the Sparkle framework by Andy Matuschak. You can read the Sparkle documentation here: https://sparkle-project.org/documentation/publishing/.
An appcast is an RSS feed with one channel that has a collection of items that each describe one app version. The appcast will decscribe each app version and will provide the latest app version to Upgrader that indicates when an upgrade should be recommended.
The appcast must be hosted on a server that can be reached by everyone from the app. The appcast XML file can be autogenerated during the release process, or just manually updated after a release is available on the app store.
The Appcast class can be used stand alone or as part of Upgrader.
This is an Appcast example for Android.
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
// On Android, setup the Appcast.
// On iOS, the default behavior will be to use the App Store version.
final appcastURL =
'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/larryaasen/upgrader/master/test/testappcast.xml';
final cfg = AppcastConfiguration(url: appcastURL, supportedOS: ['android']);
return MaterialApp(
title: 'Upgrader Example',
home: Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: Text('Upgrader Example'),
),
body: UpgradeAlert(
appcastConfig: cfg,
child: Center(child: Text('Checking...')),
)),
);
}
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:sparkle="http://www.andymatuschak.org/xml-namespaces/sparkle">
<channel>
<title>Debt Now App - Appcast</title>
<item>
<title>Version 1.15.0</title>
<description>Minor updates and improvements.</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 30 Dec 2018 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
<enclosure url="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.moonwink.treasury" sparkle:version="1.15.0" sparkle:os="android" />
</item>
</channel>
</rss>
final appcast = Appcast();
final items = await appcast.parseAppcastItemsFromUri('https://raw.githubusercontent.com/larryaasen/upgrader/master/test/testappcast.xml');
final bestItem = appcast.bestItem();
The strings displayed in upgrader can be customzied by extending the UpgraderMessages
class
to provide custom values.
As an example, to replace the Ignore button with a custom value, first create a new class that extends UpgraderMessages, and override the buttonTitleIgnore function. Next, when calling UpgradeAlert (or UpgradeCard), add the paramter messages with an instance of your extended class. Here is an example:
class MyUpgraderMessages extends UpgraderMessages {
@override
String get buttonTitleIgnore => 'My Ignore';
}
UpgradeAlert(messages: MyUpgraderMessages());
The strings displayed in upgrader are already localized in various languages. New languages will be supported in the future with minor updates.
Languages supported:
- English ('en')
- Arabic ('ar')
- Bengali ('bn')
- Filipino ('fil')
- French ('fr')
- German ('de')
- Hungarian ('hu')
- Indonesian ('id')
- Italian ('it')
- Kazakh ('kk')
- Korean ('ko')
- Persian ('fa')
- Polish ('pl')
- Portuguese ('pt')
- Russian ('ru')
- Spanish ('es')
- Tamil ('ta')
- Turkish ('tr')
- Ukrainian ('uk')
- Vietnamese ('vi')
The upgrader package can be supplied with additional languages in your code by extending the UpgraderMessages
class
to provide custom values.
As an example, to add the Spanish (es) language (which is already provided), first create a new class that extends UpgraderMessages, and override the message function. Next, add a string for each of the messages. Finally, when calling UpgradeAlert (or UpgradeCard), add the paramter messages with an instance of your extended class. Here is an example:
class MySpanishMessages extends UpgraderMessages {
/// Override the message function to provide custom language localization.
@override
String message(UpgraderMessage messageKey) {
if (languageCode == 'es') {
switch (messageKey) {
case UpgraderMessage.body:
return 'es A new version of {{appName}} is available!';
case UpgraderMessage.buttonTitleIgnore:
return 'es Ignore';
case UpgraderMessage.buttonTitleLater:
return 'es Later';
case UpgraderMessage.buttonTitleUpdate:
return 'es Update Now';
case UpgraderMessage.prompt:
return 'es Want to update?';
case UpgraderMessage.title:
return 'es Update App?';
}
}
// Messages that are not provided above can still use the default values.
return super.message(messageKey);
}
}
UpgradeAlert(messages: MySpanishMessages());
You can even force the upgrade package to use a specific language, instead of the system language on the device. Just pass the language code to an instance of UpgraderMessages when displaying the alert or card. Here is an example:
UpgradeAlert(messages: UpgraderMessages(code: 'es'));
There is a class in this Flutter package used by the upgrader widgets to download app details from the iTunes Search API. The class ITunesSearchAPI can be used standalone to query iTunes for app details.
final iTunes = ITunesSearchAPI();
final resultsFuture = iTunes.lookupByBundleId('com.google.Maps');
resultsFuture.then((results) {
print('results: $results');
});
There is a command line app used to display the results from Google Play Store. The code is located in bin/playstore_lookup.dart, and can be run from the command line like this:
$ dart playstore_lookup.dart id=com.google.android.apps.mapslite
Results:
playstore_lookup releaseNotes: • Support plus.codes URLs• Bug fixes
playstore_lookup version: 152.0.0
...
There is a command line app used to display the results from iTunes Search. The code is located in bin/itunes_lookup.dart, and can be run from the command line like this:
$ dart itunes_lookup.dart bundleid=com.google.Maps
Results:
upgrader: download: https://itunes.apple.com/lookup?bundleId=com.google.Maps
upgrader: response statusCode: 200
itunes_lookup bundleId: com.google.Maps
itunes_lookup releaseNotes: Thanks for using Google Maps!
itunes_lookup trackViewUrl: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/google-maps-transit-food/id585027354?uo=4
itunes_lookup version: 5.58
itunes_lookup all results:
{resultCount: 1, results:
...
All comments and pull requests are welcome.
Please sponsor or donate to the creator of upgrader on Flattr or Patreon.